AUTHOR'S NOTE: The High Priestess is above all a paragon of fidelity. Sallie Nichols describes her archetypal mission, in part, as "obedience to true spirit," but here I will attempt to ground that observation in more mundane terms. When the High Priestess appears in a reading, it suggests the need to root out any irregularity … Continue reading The High Priestess and Fidelity
Tarot Card Meanings
The Star, the Moon and the Sun: An Optical Analogy
AUTHOR'S NOTE: Here I'm using the analogy of a telescope to examine the transition between the three consecutive "lights" of the Major Arcana. As the series of tarot trumps nears its end, we are faced with the necessity of refocusing our view of the world from all angles - mental. emotional, spiritual and practical - … Continue reading The Star, the Moon and the Sun: An Optical Analogy
The Vertical Sword: “Lighting Rod of Inspiration”
AUTHOR'S NOTE: I've been contemplating the notion that any single, vertical sword shown in a tarot card can act as a "lightning rod" that conducts focused inspiration directly into the subject of a reading. I'm indebted to Sallie Nichols for bringing this to my attention as it relates to the raised sword of Justice that … Continue reading The Vertical Sword: “Lighting Rod of Inspiration”
“Don’t Rock the Boat!” – The Secular Hierophant
AUTHOR'S NOTE: As I've mentioned before, I spent the better part of 40 years (not very diligently) trying to get my head around Temperance in a pragmatic way because the alchemical baggage associated with it defied easy translation into terms that would make sense in a mundane reading. Once I accomplished that feat I turned … Continue reading “Don’t Rock the Boat!” – The Secular Hierophant
The “Soft Landing”
AUTHOR'S NOTE: Although it still surfaces occasionally among new students, the outdated opinion that the upside-down orientation of a tarot card automatically overrules and refutes the upright meaning doesn't get much play these days. The implications of reversal are now understood to be far more subtle and nuanced, even beyond the typical assumptions of "blockage" … Continue reading The “Soft Landing”
Sowing Dragon’s Teeth in the Garden of Death
AUTHOR'S NOTE: For post number 1,900 I thought I would tackle something a bit more profound. In her essay on the Death card, Sallie Nichols notes that the severed heads, hands and feet on the ground beneath the skeleton in the Tarot de Marseille version don't appear to have been dismembered and strewn about haphazardly, … Continue reading Sowing Dragon’s Teeth in the Garden of Death
Negative Energies and the “Dance of Liberation”
AUTHOR'S NOTE: Despite the Zen-like title, I'm not going to take this essay in a philosophical direction (at least not entirely); my objective is to "normalize" (i.e. standardize) our approach to patently inauspicious tarot cards that will offer more substance than simply insisting "There are no bad cards." In her discussion of the Hanged Man … Continue reading Negative Energies and the “Dance of Liberation”
Doin’ the Backflip
AUTHOR'S NOTE: In a recent online post, someone used the word "backflip" to describe how we might rebound from a card we don't understand to land on our own unique, intuitive interpretation. This jogged my memory about something I once read regarding reversals. One of the more unique ways I've ever seen for handling reversed … Continue reading Doin’ the Backflip
Circular Thinking and the “Simultaneity of All Opposites”
AUTHOR'S NOTE: The Wheel of Fortune is a card that is passed over lightly by many tarot writers, and by most readers who think they know exactly what it means: some kind of change that can go either way, favorable or unfavorable. The reading then moves on to the next card in the spread to … Continue reading Circular Thinking and the “Simultaneity of All Opposites”
“The Kid-Glove Treatment:” A Soft Approach to Reversals
AUTHOR'S NOTE: This meditation on reversed cards joins more than a dozen other unconventional approaches I've already examined in past essays, while revisiting some of my earlier observations. (See my two "compendiums" [compendia?] of earlier posts on the subject elsewhere in this blog.) "Kid gloves" were made from the exceptionally supple hides of baby goats … Continue reading “The Kid-Glove Treatment:” A Soft Approach to Reversals